30 \ ,: . .. -\ -. Y OU'LL find our shop in the Biltmore a conveni- ent place to buy your new Stetson. "attå tbey wear like tbe name" L · NO 7lìe Custom Jlatter HAVE YOU SEEN? De Luxe Edition Ready October, 1925 PICTURESQUE AMERICA Its Parks and Playgrounds Edited by J. F. KANE ( I 90 Collaborators) 5 00 pages; 550 illustrations- Newman, Clatworthy, Harmon, Haynes, etc.; 5 color inserts; 25 maps, size 8 x I o -((America in Pictures." Story of the Parks and Outdoor Life-Yard, Harkin, Van Dyke, Rinehart, Zane Grey, Conan Doyle and eighty well-known authors. Retail Price $15.00 (Pre-publication offer $ I 0.00, eff ective for limited period.) RESORTS AND PLAY- GROUNDS OF AMERICA Vanderbilt Avenue Bldg. 5 I East 4-2nd St. N ew York Send for Illustrated Booklet "TEIiI.I ME A BOOK TO READ" These Are a Few of the Rècent Ones Best JiV orth W hilt NOVELS THE PROFESSOR'S HOUSE, by Willa Cather (Knopf). Contemplation, by an admirable artist who "sees life steadily," etc., of the way of the world with the unworldly, and of the American get-ahead spirit with individuals above it, distilled into the stories of Tom Outland and Professor St. Peter. SUSPENSE, by Joseph Conrad (Douhleday, Page). A fascinating and tantalizing fragment; the Napoleonic romance he left unfinished. CHRISTINA ALBERTA'S FATHER, by H. G. Wells (Macmillan). A post-war girl bent on saving her indíviduality, and Mr. Preemby, laundry- man, delusionally bent on saving mankind. Over-written, yet something of a second com- ing of the best of the multifarious H. G. Wellses. THE VENETIAN GLASS NEPHEW, by Elinor Wylie (Doran). A fantasy, so beautiful that its fine ironic import is a minor matter. Casa- nova, as necromancer, figures in it. FIRECRACKERS, by Carl Van Vechten (Knopf). The present-day Vanity Fair of Manhattan, hit off in the modern spirit, and at least as well as such things are being done anywhere. MISCHIEF, by Ben Travers (DouhZeday, Page). Straight farce, built up from stock blueprints, but sometimes abo t as funny as farce can be. THE RED LAMP, by Mary Roberts Rinehart (Doran). The mystery story at its most mys- terious, human and exciting, even if not in mechanical p rfection. SAMUEL DRUMMOND, by Thomas Boyd (Scrih- ner's). What war times and their hysterias can do to peaceful lives. The war time repre- sented is the Civil-the life, a farmer's. PORGY, by Du Bose Heyward (Doran). Some negroes of Catfish Row, Charleston, and a hurricane that :floods it. Remarkably well wri tten. SHORT STORIES FIVE ORIENTAL TALES, by Comte de Gobineau (Viking Press). For those who, like the maker of this list, did not know Gobineau's uN ouvelles Asiatiques) in the original. GENERAL H. L. MENCKEN, by Ernest Boyd (McBride). A sort of vademecum for admirers of Menc- ken who want a complete idea of his service and career. ALONG THE ROAD, by Aldous Huxley (Doran). Travel essays, well worth reading. ONCE A WEEK, by A. A. Milne (Dutton). An- other book of his contributions to Punch. More of these than of those in "The Holiday Round," or "Oranges and Lemons," have faded. . N ow the British Labor Party has voted down the Communists and the London papers can stop printing red time stories. This is news that should be read from left to right. . It now appears that Secretary Kellogg omitted from his quoted extract from Saklatvala's speech parts of paragraphs and even parts of sentences, thus consid- erably altering the meaning of the whole. A good day's work for the Misstate De- partment. THE NE,WYORKER SAMUEL PEPYS a, cJJ 'Portrait in cMin1: ture ... \ J.lucas Du- breton 1 þ "Does for Pepys what 'Ariel' did for Shelley:' -Stallings tII1 PUTNAMS 1 \VEST f..5TH S't N. \': G f 1ii'E'RAND &ART /1 '"', þ '. ..,'.' _ 1-!!9 l -"'" ß ,:j/ l',/,' Ii Y cA n: dern l,,'.' I ParISIan's / . /' e:;; := es j' /, i AN ;OCreAU .1 I $ 2. at bookstores . PUTNAM.S 4j( . ---------- The exciting story 01 A vagabond father · A madcap daughter , by , FLOYD DELL Th. Gath., 01 "MOON.CAIF' etc. $2.00 _ GEORGE H DORAN I ' '1 1 COMPANY,NewYork -. . -------------- <<T'<<T'<<T'<<T'<<T'<<T'<<T'<<T'